Project Details
- Project Name
- Albert and Edith Adelman Residence Restoration
- Location
- Wisconsin
- Project Types
- Single Family
- Project Scope
- Preservation/Restoration
- Size
- 2,600 sq. feet
- Project Status
- Built
2015 Residential Architect Design Awards
Restoration/Preservation
Award
Built in 1948 for a young couple with three children, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Albert and Edith Adelman House is still inhabited by members of the Adelman family. The 2,600-square-foot Usonian home remained more or less unaltered until 2011, when the Kubala Washatko Architects was hired to do a comprehensive restoration. Acting as both architect and construction manager, the Cedarburg, Wis.–based firm replaced the home’s rotting wood-shake roof with water-resistant cedar shingles, installed a new epoxy-coated red concrete floor after removing the damaged original, and added an entry skylight—an unrealized part of Wright’s design. To update the mechanical systems, the architects dug new geothermal wells and integrated these with mini-split units hidden around the house. The master bathroom was reconfigured with the scrupulous care that is typical of the whole project. —Amanda Kolson Hurley
From the Jury
Project Credits
Project Size: 2,600 square feet
Construction Cost: $500 per square foot
Click here to see all of the winners from the 2015 Residential Architect Design Awards.